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Proud of how staff responded: Read Man Utd vice-chairman Ed Woodward's statement about Old Trafford bomb hoax

“The safety of the fans is our number one aim at every event we host at Old Trafford. Overall, I'm proud of how our staff responded." - Ed Woodward

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Manchester United's final Premier League game of the season against Bournemouth, which was abandoned on Sunday after the discovery of a suspect device at Old Trafford, will be played on Tuesday, the League announced in a statement. A bomb disposal team carried out a controlled explosion on the suspect device -- later described as not viable -- after the 75,000-seater stadium was evacuated. The game will now take place at 1900 GMT on Tuesday, making it a busy week for United who play in the FA Cup final against Crystal Palace four days later on Saturday. The statement from the Premier League said: "We would like to thank Manchester United's staff, the police and other emergency services for all their efforts today as well as rearranging the match for this coming Tuesday."

Now Man Utd vice-chairman Ed Woodward has released a statement stating he was proud of the way their staff responded. Man Utd wrote on their official website: 

“The safety of the fans is our number one aim at every event we host at Old Trafford.  Overall, I'm proud of how our staff responded.

The facts are:

• On the discovery of a suspect package, the police and the club worked quickly and closely to identify the threat, make people safe and evacuate the ground calmly and efficiently.
• Fans of both clubs behaved impeccably and the evacuation – the first of its type in the UK – was a complete success.
• Following investigation, the device proved to have been left in error following the training of dog handlers by a sub-contractor.
• The contractor had signed the device as having been recovered along with the 13 other devices at the end of the exercise. 
• That device could not have been detected by sniffer dogs on the routine matchday search of the 100 Club, as it contained no explosives and was used in an exercise training handlers not dogs.

“Once a live situation was identified, the club and police had no option but to treat the matter as a potential terror threat; we could not have assumed it was a training exercise error. Presented with the same situation in the future, we would take the same action.

“We have worked very closely with the police and counter-terrorism specialists for many years now and enjoy their support on a daily basis.

“For tomorrow’s (Tuesday) rearranged match against Bournemouth, we are working closely with Greater Manchester Police to ensure that robust security measures continue to be of the highest priority.

“We are conducting a detailed evaluation with the help of the police and will share our findings across the rest of the game. Valuable lessons will have been learned from yesterday’s events and it is important that those are shared with other stadium operators to ensure that the safety of the public remains the first duty of us all.”

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